EARTH · RADIATION WATCH · KS

Radiation Levels in Wichita

The latest background-radiation reading from the EPA RadNet fixed gamma monitor at Wichita, KS — a US government sensor that reports a dose ratein nanosieverts per hour, updated roughly hourly. The figure below is live, shown with the time it was taken, and framed against typical natural background — a measurement, never a safety verdict.

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What this reading means

Typical natural background radiation sits around 0.05–0.20 µSv/h (50–200 nSv/h)— the everyday range that comes from cosmic rays, the ground, and the air. Wichita’s monitor will normally read somewhere in or near that band. A reading a little above it isn’t automatically a concern: altitude and local geology (granite bedrock in particular) naturally lift the background in some places. This page shows the number and its context; it doesn’t interpret it as safe or unsafe. If a reading ever matters to you, consult EPA RadNet directly.

About this monitor

NETWORKEPA RadNet
LOCATIONWichita, KS
REPORTSDose rate · ~hourly

EPA RadNet is the US Environmental Protection Agency’s national network of fixed monitors, built to watch for any change in environmental radiation. Each station reports a native dose-equivalent rate in nanosieverts per hour and its data is approved on a short lag, so the newest figure for Wichitamay be a few hours old. The monitor sits in or near the city — we show it as the station city, not an exact street pinpoint.

Nearby monitors

The closest EPA RadNet stations to Wichita— compare the readings across the region.

See it in context